home grown deep fried
Blue- eyed
No, "starting point" is not hyphenated. It is two separate words.
certain compound words that cannot be written as one word are HYPHENATEDexattorney-in-law
Compound words, numbers from twenty-one to ninety-nine, and adjectives formed by adding -like or -wide should be hyphenated. Additionally, compound modifiers that come before a noun should also be hyphenated for clarity.
Compound nouns are either separate words (apple juice), or hyphenated words (brother-in-law), or one word (headmaster).
Dictionaries don't show 'allaround' as a compound word, they show it as either two words or a hyphenated word, all-around.
No, it is the adverb form of actual. A compound word is a word that is made up of two words eg keyboard, or two or more words hyphenated eg sister-in-law,
Yes, "mother-in-law" is a compound word. It is made up of three words ("mother," "in," and "law") that have been combined to form a single word with a specific meaning.
Compound nouns can be written: As one word: policeman As a hyphenated word: six-pack As two separate words: fast ball
Graphically, components of a compound are usually jointly written or hyphenated while words in a word combination are always separately written.
No they shouldn't be hyphenated.
A hyphenated modifier is a compound adjective or adverb created by hyphenating multiple words together that work as one word. Example: He gave me that there's-a-dead-body-in-my-fridge sort of smile.